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FPW on Windows 7
Message
From
25/07/2011 23:27:23
 
 
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Installation, Setup and Configuration
Environment versions
Visual FoxPro:
FoxPro Windows
OS:
Windows 7
Database:
Visual FoxPro
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01519115
Message ID:
01519132
Views:
62
This message has been marked as a message which has helped to the initial question of the thread.
>>>FPW won't start on my Windows 7 (x64) installation. What am I doing wrong??
>>
>>Trying is what you are doing wrong :)
>>
>>I run it on XP Mode on my W7 64 installation for AFAIK it won't work in windows 7 64 as it is a 16 bit app.
>
>I tried every compatibility mode. None works.

To expand on Hugo's comments, Windows 7 64-bit will not directly run 16-bit apps - only 64- and 32-bit apps.

If you want to run FPW on the 64-bit machine, one way is to:

1. Create a virtual machine on your 64-bit computer
2. Install a 32-bit OS on that virtual machine (usually Windows XP)
3. Install and run FPW on that XP VM

If your copy of Windows 7 is Professional or higher, it includes so-called "XP Mode". This is steps 1 and 2 above rolled into a single installation, and you don't have to buy any more software. XP Mode is not installed by default on Pro or higher, as Hugo points out you have to download and install it. Once you do so, you in effect have a 32-bit XP computer that you can start and stop at will. You can install anything you want (32- or 16-bit) on that virtual machine.

There are other virtual machine managers (VMMs) available. One I've used a bit is Oracle VM (formerly Sun) VirtualBox. That gives you step 1 above. Once that's installed, you use it to manually create one or more VMs. On a suitable VM you install XP. Going this way, you have to have a separate license for Windows XP.

VirtualBox is far more powerful than XP mode. You can install a wide range of "guest" OSs, not just 32-bit Windows XP ( http://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Guest_OSes ). You can install 64-bit guest OSs on a 64-bit host, or even a 32-bit host (!) if you have the right hardware. One of its most useful features is the ability to create snapshots, which is terrific for testing. If you have enough CPU and RAM you can run multiple VMs simultaneously, and configure virtual networking between them so you in effect have a "network in a box".
Regards. Al

"Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent." -- Isaac Asimov
"Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right." -- Isaac Asimov

Neither a despot, nor a doormat, be

Every app wants to be a database app when it grows up
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